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Light pollution filters: suggestions?

Hi all, I recently started guiding and as a consquence of the prolonged exposure (300s) - this is my guess - all of my pictures have a very annoying red tinge due to light pollution that wasn't present in my previous unguided images (60-90s). I thought that maybe I should go back to shorter exposurer…but then I would miss the benefits of having a guiding system …so perhaps I need a light pollution filter! I use an unmodded dslr with a short focal newtonian…any suggestions about the light pollution filter?

I recently had to give up my observatory east of Tucson, AZ where I had dark, desert skies. We had to move into town for health reasons. I now shoot from a small lighted parking lot just a few blocks from mid-town. The light pollution is so bad that I can't even see stars dimmer than mag 5! I now have a new Celestron CGX mount and an Orion EON 130mm Triplet Apo. I would have loved this setup under dark skies! I am using a modified Canon T3i camera but I will be switching to an ASI1600mm with a filter wheel soon. Right now I use a clip-in Astronomic CLS-CCD filter that does very well filtering out man-made light. I have no idea what would work with observing but it works well for photography. This site has helped me a bunch https://astrobackyard.com The site belongs to a guy that lives in downtown Toronto. Good luck.

I'd first make sure that the red tinge isn't amp glow - on my Nikon, the amp glow would always show up as a red cast. Light pollution would show up as bright pink, but then again, I image under Bortle 7-8 skies. For my color cameras, the Orion SkyGlow Astrophotography filter did a great job. There are other good options out there, like the Optolong L-Pro, Astronomik CLS, Astronomik CLS CCD, IDAS LPS P2, Baader Moon & Skyglow Neodymium, etc. Some are known for causing a bit of a bluer cast and false color than others and some are better at filtering out light pollution where others can be a bit weak. I'd take a close look at what spectra they block and read reviews. They're all very helpful - even under skies that aren't that light polluted. Jerry Lodriguss has some great examples of how they work on his site: http://www.astropix.com/html/i_astrop/cls_filter.html

If you have severe light pollution (Bortle 7 and higher), I'd recommend switching to mono if you can. I found it much easier to manage light pollution with a mono camera than a color camera. Good luck and clear skies!

I use a Nikon D5300, unmodified, and live under Bortle 7-8 skies as well, and have struggled with finding a good light pollution filter as well. My telescope is an f-8 RC 8". After trying, and returning, several different kinds I have finally settled on the Optolong L-pro. So far, it's been a fantastic performer. Some day I plan on switching to a mono camera, but that will cost me an arm and a leg, so in the meantime I'll practice and develop my skills with the Nikon and the Optolong.

I just ordered a light pollution filter, it will take long time to arrive, but hopefully once it arrives then i give it a try then i can review or confirm people about my impression, and i am planning to use that with my mono camera and filters.

I use a different approach. I work hard on gradient reduction, and don't use broadband light pollution filters. They can make getting good color difficult, they work by ripping out parts of the color spectrum. That only works well on emission nebulae, and metal vapor lights, gradient reduction uses spatial variability, works equally well on every target, every light pollution source.

Bortle 7.

Pretty much every experienced imager uses gradient reduction. Some add a broadband LP filter (the two techniques can work together), some don't. Some only add it on emission nebulae.

Re exposure. What you want to do is to compare the read noise of the camera to the position of the obvious skyfog peak in the (linear) histogram. Some units conversion is necessary. Exposing to where the skyfog peak is more than 10X the read noise squared, gets you nothing but reduced dynamic range. <smile>

Then you just shoot more subs. Total imaging time is far more important than getting the subexposure time exactly "right".

Michele VonciI need a light pollution filter! I use an unmodded dslr with a short focal newtonian…any suggestions about the light pollution filter?

I also use an unmodified dslr. I recently bought an IDAS D2 LPS filter. It is designed to filter newer LED light as well as LPS and HPS. My town is replacing their older street lights with LED so the D2 seemed like a good choice. It’s a little pricey but after using it a couple of nights it seems to be doing a good job. I took 210 second exposures at ISO 1600 and the gradients weren’t too bad. Plus the color balance was easy to correct in post processing. I live in a Bortle 7 zone and without the filter my subs are completely blown out at about 90 to 120 seconds. So I probably doubled my maximum exposure. If you’re dealing with light pollution from LED sources, I’d consider the D2.

Hi Michele,As you know, I'm Manchester based too and the city centre is directly south from my observing location. I started off using the IDAS LPS D1 filter which allowed me to do guided exposures of 180". Recently I have bought the STC Astro Duo-Narrowband filter which is effectively a combination of Ha and OIII narrowband filters that you use on a colour camera. I'm very happy with this and it has opened up many new ways of processing images - either in RBG or splitting out the Ha and OIII and processing separately before combining in all sorts of different ways to produce Ha alone, bicolour (Ha/OIII), HOO, etc.Dan

Daniel TackleyAs you know, I'm Manchester based too and the city centre is directly south from my observing location. I started off using the IDAS LPS D1 filter which allowed me to do guided exposures of 180"

Hi Daniel, I remebered that you once commented one of my iris nebula pictures with the suggetsion of some light pollution filters…I've deleted that pictures to make room for new pictures - that's the downside of having a free astrobin account - and I've lost your comment too. I believe the filter you suggested was indeed the IDas Lps D1! I have manchester to the north and stockport to the east…I know Stockport Council is changing sodium street lights for leds…perhaps it might be worth using the d2 which as far as I have read cuts better the led continous spectrum?

You can also check out the STC astro-multispectra filter. I use that with my QHY168C OSC camera and didn't appreciate how effective it was until I had a go at imaging Eta Carina which only rises to 15 degrees above my light polluted southern horizon. Looking through a very good pair of 15x70 binos I could see stars I reckon down to about mag 7 but there was no hint of any nebulosity and I was very surprised when the first frame downloaded and the nebula was very clear. In the end I got an image I was quite pleased with, given the circumstances. The LMC climbs to 6 degrees above my horizon but I need to find a tree filter before I can image that.Eta Carina nebula by John Sim, on Flickr

When I was imaging with an unmodified DSLR (Nikon D5100) I used a Baader UHC-S 2" filter that screwed into an extension and then straight into the OTA.It cuts out a vast majority of both sodium and mercury vapour light signal. This is most likely the light pollution that you're experiencing.They are inexpensive and I highly recommend them. The contrast difference when compared to without is amazing and the edges of your images will be much cleaner.Good luck and clear skies.

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